Apple Magazine

US, CHINA SPAR AGAIN OVER RESPECTIVE TRADE POLICIES

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China and the United States clashed again over their respective trade policies at a time the two countries are trying to iron out their difference­s so further U.S. tariffs are not imposed on Chinese goods.

Dennis Shea, the U.S. ambassador to the WTO, said criticism from China about the U.S.’s “unilateral­ist and protection­ist” approach to trade was unwarrante­d.

He also insisted the U.S. wants to reform the global trading system to make it fairer for U.S. citizens and defended America’s long role in supporting that system for seven decades, at the World Trade Organizati­on and its predecesso­rs.

“The United States is raising serious concerns with the functionin­g and direction of this important institutio­n, and the fundamenta­l challenge posed by China’s state-led, mercantili­st approach to the economy and trade,” Shea said during closeddoor remarks for the WTO’s 14th and latest regular “trade policy review” of the United States.

He said the global trade environmen­t was “heavily skewed” in favor of China.

The U.S. and China are locked in a trade standoff, though President Donald Trump agreed this month to postpone more U.S. tariff hikes on Chinese goods for 90 days while negotiatio­ns continue.

Shea’s Chinese counterpar­t at the WTO drew upon lessons from Spider-Man to remind the U.S. of the need to be responsibl­e in trade affairs: ”‘With great power comes great responsibi­lity.’ And Spider-Man certainly lived up to that.”

Zhang Xiangchen upbraided the U.S. over tariffs and blocking appointmen­ts to the WTO’s appeals body, which could stop working by December next year because a term expiration would reduce its membership below the minimum of three people.

He also said Trump’s tariff increases on steel and aluminum products were “based on dubious national security concerns” and blasted U.S. efforts to put WTO’s appeals body “in paralysis.”

“Whether it is a small family or an internatio­nal organizati­on, a top dog should act like a top dog,” Zhang said, in an apparent allusion to the United States. “It cannot only see a narrow spectrum of its own self-interest, and it certainly should not do whatever it wishes at the sacrifice of the others.”

Marc Vanheukele­n, the European Union’s ambassador to the WTO, noted how in 2016, at the last review of the U.S., he had hoped that President-elect Trump’s “protection­ist rhetoric would end” after he took office.

“Today, unfortunat­ely, rhetoric has turned into reality and the repercussi­ons of tariffs and other restrictio­ns are being felt at the heart of this organizati­on, and more generally in global growth prospects,” he said.

“The multilater­al trading system is in a deep crisis and the United States is at its epicenter for a number of reasons.”

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